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I missed the unveiling of Baseball America's annual Top 100 Prospects list last week because I had jury duty. So I'll try to make up for that by tackling some Top 100-related questions here.

During the Top 100 chat, J.J. Cooper mentioned that you could provide a list of all the players who received votes but didn't make the list. Can you please do that?

Tracy Keinast
Myrtle Beach, S.C.

The first step in our annual Top 100 process is for BA editors to submit personal Top 150 lists, which we crunch together in a spreadsheet and then let the arguments begin. This year, seven editors provided Top 150s, and 195 different players appeared on at least one list.

Eight players made all seven Top 150s but fell short of the overall Top 100: Cardinals first baseman Matt Adams, Pirates outfielder Josh Bell, Braves catcher Christian Bethancourt, Mets shortstop Gavin Cecchini, Rays righthander Alex Colome, Cubs outfielder Brett Jackson, Red Sox catcher Blake Swihart and Brewers righty Tyler Thornburg. Just to clarify, I listed those eight alphabetically and they are not the eight prospects who came closest to making the list. The highest ranking on any individual list went to Giants righthander Chris Stratton, who was No. 50 in the eyes of one editor.

Tracy was the first of 16 people to ask for the also-receiving-votes list, which is below, along with each prospect's highest ranking:

Player, Pos, Team

Top 150s

Peak

Matt Adams, 1b, Cardinals

7

88

Jorge Alfaro, c/1b, Rangers

3

111

Cody Allen, rhp, Indians

4

123

Josh Bell, of, Pirates

7

80

J.O. Berrios, rhp, Twins

5

99

Christian Bethancourt, c, Braves

7

100

Chad Bettis, rhp, Rockies

1

136

Jorge Bonifacio, of, Royals

5

101

Bryce Brentz, of, Red Sox

4

125

Lewis Brinson, of, Rangers

1

142

Gary Brown, of, Giants

6

103

Cody Buckel, rhp, Rangers

2

99

Jose Campos, rhp, Yankees

3

126

Carter Capps, rhp, Mariners

6

102

Garin Cecchini, 3b, Red Sox

6

92

Gavin Cecchini, ss, Mets

7

105

Michael Choice, of, Athletics

6

107

A.J. Cole, rhp, Nationals

5

94

Alex Colome, rhp, Rays

7

88

Jared Cosart, rhp, Astros

5

97

D.J. Davis, of, Blue Jays

4

93

Mike Foltynewicz, rhp, Astros

6

88

Kyuji Fujikawa, rhp, Cubs

1

121

Michael Fulmer, rhp, Mets

1

146

Joey Gallo, 3b, Rangers

5

78

Onelki Garcia, lhp, Dodgers

1

147

Sean Gilmartin, lhp, Braves

4

122

Luiz Gohara, lhp, Mariners

1

150

Sonny Gray, rhp, Athletics

4

106

Justin Grimm, rhp, Rangers

4

93

Angelo Gumbs, 2b, Yankees

1

149

Adeiny Hechavarria, inf, Marlins

5

96

Johnny Hellweg, rhp, Brewers

3

108

David Holmberg, lhp, Diamondbacks

2

121

J.J. Hoover, rhp, Reds

3

109

Jose Iglesias, ss, Red Sox

1

142

Brett Jackson, of, Cubs

7

89

Luke Jackson, rhp, Rangers

3

103

Pierce Johnson, rhp, Cubs

1

130

Tommy Joseph, c/1b, Phillies

6

90

Taylor Jungmann, rhp, Brewers

4

120

Nate Karns, rhp, Nationals

1

137

Carson Kelly, 3b, Cardinals

1

144

Zach Lee, rhp, Dodgers

5

104

Rymer Liriano, of, Padres

6

77

Nick Maronde, lhp, Angels

3

118

Deven Marrero, ss, Red Sox

2

98

Ethan Martin, rhp, Phillies

1

123

Brandon Maurer, rhp, Mariners

6

90

Brad Miller, ss, Mariners

3

107

Adalberto Mondesi, ss, Royals

6

102

Adam Morgan, lhp, Phillies

3

102

Hunter Morris, 1b, Brewers

2

135

Tyler Naquin, of, Indians

4

130

Jimmy Nelson, rhp, Brewers

2

114

Brandon Nimmo, of, Mets

3

121

Daniel Norris, lhp, Blue Jays

1

136

Roberto Osuna, rhp, Blue Jays

6

79

Chris Owings, ss, Diamondbacks

1

128

Joe Panik, ss, Giants

4

115

Kyle Parker, of, Rockies

1

135

Dorssys Paulino, ss, Indians

6

79

Brad Peacock, rhp, Astros

5

105

Joc Pederson, of, Dodgers

6

106

Eury Perez, of, Nationals

1

133

Jonathan Pettibone, rhp, Phillies

4

105

J.T. Realmuto, c, Marlins

1

148

Chris Reed, lhp, Dodgers

2

134

Victor Roache, of, Brewers

1

150

Paco Rodriguez, lhp, Dodgers

2

112

Enny Romero, lhp, Rays

1

122

Stefen Romero, 2b, Mariners

1

129

Eddie Rosario, 2b/of, Twins

4

106

Darin Ruf, 1b/of, Phillies

2

118

Rio Ruiz, 3b, Astros

1

145

Carlos Sanchez, ss/2b, White Sox

5

80

Victor Sanchez, rhp, Mariners

1

134

Domingo Santana, Astros

1

133

Luis Sardinas, ss/2b, Rangers

6

106

Jonathan Schoop, 2b/ss, Orioles

6

101

Corey Seager, ss, Dodgers

6

97

Richie Shaffer, 3b, Rays

5

114

Lucas Sims, rhp, Braves

3

101

Matt Skole, 3b, Nationals

2

133

Dan Straily, rhp, Athletics

3

88

Chris Stratton, rhp, Giants

6

50

Blake Swihart, c, Red Sox

7

82

Trayce Thompson, of, White Sox

3

111

Tyler Thornburg, rhp, Brewers

7

86

Nick Tropeano, rhp, Astros

2

130

Drew Vettleson, of, Rays

2

121

Dan Vogelbach, 1b, Cubs

1

131

Ryan Wheeler, 3b/1b/of, Rockies

1

131

Matt Wisler, rhp, Padres

1

128

Brandon Workman, rhp, Red Sox

1

139

Which Top 100 Prospects have the greatest potential to move up the rankings when the 2014 list comes out? Which five players who missed the 2013 list could make big upward moves on the 2014 list?

John Finley
Chagrin Falls, Ohio

This question has become an Ask BA tradition, and I believe John has been the one to post it in three of the last four years. Last year, I batted .400. I named 10 players and nailed Cubs shortstop Javier Baez and Yankees outfielder Mason Williams as Top 100 Prospects poised to move well up the next list, as well as Padres catcher Austin Hedges and Twins righthander Alex Meyer as guys who missed out in 2012 and could appear fairly high on the 2013 rankings.

From the top half of this year's list, the player who jumps out the most as having the best chance to become an elite prospect in 2013 is Padres lefthander Max Fried (No. 46). Fried was overshadowed somewhat by Lucas Giolito at the Harvard-Westlake School (Studio City, Calif.), but he was also the best prep southpaw since Clayton Kershaw. I expect Fried to dominate at low Class A Fort Wayne this season and rank as the top lefty prospect in the game heading into 2014. Athletics shortstop Addison Russell (No. 48) is a close second to Fried in terms of upward mobility among Top 50 Prospects.

I see in the new Top 100 Prospects list that BA ranks Tigers third baseman/outfielder Nick Castellanos at No. 21 while Orioles second baseman/shortstop Jonathan Schoop is unranked. Both were 20 years old last season, with Schoop being five months older. Schoop put up better numbers in Double-A and in the Arizona Fall League, and he may also be able to play the middle infield in the majors. Can you please comment on why BA ranked the lesser performer so much higher?

Adam Forster
Millburn, N.J.

While Schoop did put up better numbers in Double-A and the AFL, I wouldn't call Castellanos a lesser performer. Castellanos has hit .316/.367/.443 as a pro, compared to .266/.336/.396 for Schoop. Though Schoop has a better K-BB ratio (243-136 vs. 253-85), Castellanos still has posted a significantly higher batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage.

Castellanos is one of the best pure hitters in the minors, and his pitch-recognition skills and ability to handle premium fastballs are significantly better than Schoop's. There's no doubt that Castellanos could use more patience and that Schoop has promise—their raw power is comparable—but I don't think they're in the same class offensively.

The gap in their defensive value may not be as great as it may seem, either. While Schoop is currently a middle infielder, his below-average speed could eventually move him to third base or an outfield corner. He has soft hands and a strong arm, but he's not a big league shortstop and his range and quickness may not be enough for second base in the long run.